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Stories about: Egypt


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Malaria Also Killed Ancient Egyptians

Two mummies of Egyptians who died very young, about 3 and a half millennia ago, were unearthed from a nameless tomb in Thebes, once a great necropolis and capital city of Egypt. DNA techniques used by the researchers enabled them to find out that the 2 people were killed by malaria, which pushes further in time the ...

24 October 2008
03:59 GMT

"Christ the Magician" Reads Ancient Cup

Archaeologists discovered an ancient bowl, dated 2nd century BC to early 1st century AD, engraved with an inscription that refers to Christ, the earliest one found to date. The carving on the bowl reads "DIA CHRSTOU O GOISTAIS," which can be translated either as "by Christ the magician" or "the magician by Chris...

6 October 2008
08:12 GMT

How Pyramids Work

Among the most puzzling monuments in the world, pyramids are also among the first large-scale landmarks, built with no help from the engineering and technology of modern times. Although the large majority thinks of Egypt when speaking of pyramids, it is not the only place where they exist(ed).Geometrically speaking, ...

30 September 2008
09:17 GMT

A Sunken Museum to Be Built in Egypt

The first underwater museum in the world will allow Egypt's visitors to glance at the remains of queen Cleopatra's Palace covered long ago by the waters of the Mediterranean Sea.  The area near the New Library of Alexandria, where Cleopatra and her Roman lover, Mark Antony stayed just before she commit...

18 September 2008
08:27 GMT

Etisalat Egypt Expands Its Network with Huawei

Huawei, the giant Chinese telecommunications company based in Shenzhen, announced that it was selected by Etisalat Misr, one of Egypt's three mobile carriers, to expand and enhance its GSM / 3.75G network. Following the new agreement between the two companies, Huawei will deploy an end-to-end network soluti...

11 September 2008
08:47 GMT

Egyptian Gods and Christianity

The pantheon of the ancient Egyptians was rich in diverse deities. The question inevitably arises: how could this polytheist religion influence later monotheist religions?The Sun GodThe main Egyptian deity was Amon Re, the king of all gods and the Sun God. The Sun had a central position in the religion of the ancient...

13 May 2008
10:21 GMT

A Pharaoh with Female Body

The pharaoh Amenophis IV (1372-1354 BC) is most known amongst Egyptologists as the pharaoh who intended to introduce a monotheist religion in ancient Egypt. The cult of Aton (the solar disk) officially replaced Amon-Ra's cult. This was clearly an act of authority of the pharaoh, as priests considered the new ori...

6 May 2008
03:09 GMT

The Largest Pharaoh Tomb Is Larger than Previously Thought

It has already been known as the largest pharaoh tomb in the Valley of the Kings. Now it appears that the tomb of Seti I, who ruled Egypt between 1313-1292 BC, is larger than originally believed. In 1817, Giovanni Battista Belzoni measured the tomb as being 328 ft (107 m) long. The new research shows its real length ...

21 April 2008
02:59 GMT

Flowers: Legends, Myths, Symbols

In time, flowers generated thousands of legends and myths. These legends speak about their powers and magical virtues. No wonder flowers have their secret languages. The rose is by far the flower most charged of symbolism and meaning. 25 Ma year old petrified fossils of roses (Rosa sp) were found. The oldest known hu...

2 April 2008
17:26 GMT

Huge Statue of Powerful Egyptian Queen Has Been Found

This is one of the best preserved and oldest large Egyptian statues. A European-Egyptian team discovered the 12-ft-tall (3.6-m-tall) quartzite representation of the powerful Egyptian queen at the mortuary temple of Amenhotep III on Luxor's West Bank. The statue was joined to the broken-off leg of a much larger c...

1 April 2008
04:30 GMT

Debunked Myths About How the Egyptian Pyramids Were Built

There is nothing more defining for the Egyptian civilization than the royal tombs called pyramids. Donald Redford, professor of Classics and ancient Mediterranean studies at Penn State has attempted, on Physorg.com, to explain how the ancient Egyptians built the pyramids, based on their solar religion. The Egyptian s...

28 March 2008
09:45 GMT

The Mysteries of the Egyptian Sun

The Sun had a central position in the religion of the ancient Egyptians. First, it was represented as the golden scarab, Hepri, symbolizing the becoming. Then, the hieroglyph of Sun, the proper god Ra (Re), appeared, as a circle with a point in the middle. A first rank god, Ra personified the Sun as source of vital f...

27 March 2008
10:10 GMT

The Egyptian Pyramids: How They Appeared and How They Were Built

When the Greeks saw the odd tombs of the pharaohs for the first time, they observed they had the shape of cookies made of flour and sesame, called "piramys". Hence the name "pyramids", even if the Egyptians always called them "mer". The shape of the pyramids was the result of an architectonic concept that evolved in ...

21 March 2008
17:31 GMT

The Gold of the Pharaohs

How much gold did the ancient Egyptian goldsmith process? The historian Hecateus of Miletus (4th century BC) said the extracted gold would raise to 32 million Greek mines (the 'mine' was the ancient Greek unit of mass; the amount in discussion represents about 10,000 tonnes!), a highly exaggerated number. T...

20 March 2008
11:20 GMT

The Mystic River: Nile

This river is the maker of the oldest civilization recorded by the historical sources: 5,000 years ago, the Egyptian state emerged on its banks. It is best known as the longest river on the planet. Nile is consensually considered so as it has 6,695 km in length, even if some say that Amazon is longer (6,800 km). The ...

15 March 2008
09:05 GMT

When Was the Donkey Domesticated?

It has been considered that the donkey was domesticated 6,000 years ago, from the African wild ass (Equus asinus), in northeastern Africa, to which it still bears a great resemblance, including the shoulders' "cross" (the wild donkeys of southwestern US and other areas are just feral bewildered animals). But a n...

11 March 2008
06:02 GMT

The Enigma of the Great Sphinx

The Great Sphinx of Giza is the largest monolith statue in the world. It is 73.5 m (241 ft) long, 6 m (20 ft) wide, and 20 m (65 ft) high and represent the oldest known monumental sculpture. But its origins are still a subject of debate, as the statue seems to be much older than the Egyptian civilization. In the famo...

12 February 2008
14:06 GMT

The First Dog Mummies Ever Found in Egypt!

In the heaven of the tomb raiders, an American-Russian team has managed to find 4 ancient tombs with well-preserved mummies, ornate painted coffins, and mummified dogs. The necropolis of Deir el-Banat is located in the oasis El Faiyum, 50 mi (80 km) southwest of Cairo, a place also famous for the discoveries of the o...

31 January 2008
02:55 GMT

9 Things About the Ancient Egyptian Civilization

1. The fertile banks of the Nile River offered several annual crops, as many floodings the river produced. The farmers would eagerly wait for the flooding, because after the water's retreat, the fields remained covered with a thick layer of mud on which the crops grew rapidly. This condition boosted the existenc...

30 January 2008
15:58 GMT

Who Were the Black Pharaohs?

Nubia is the name of a region historically located in southern Egypt and northern Sudan, at the gates of Black Africa, stretching from the first cataract to the sixth cataract of the Nile River. The Egyptians called the main Nubia kingdom 'Kush'. Kush was located on the region of the third cataract and was ...

29 January 2008
08:37 GMT

What's An Obelisk?

Their origins are traced in ancient Egypt, but they "traveled" around the world, reaching cities like Istanbul, London, Paris, Rome and New York. The obelisk is a stone column with four sides thinning towards the upper part and ending with a pointed, pyramidal top. The oldest obelisks are 4,000 years old, while the ...

29 November 2007
02:56 GMT

Egyptian Authorities Out for Blogger Blood

How would it feel if you heard that anything you wrote on your blog could send you to jail? Imagine how Abdel Karim Suleiman felt when he was charged with insulting Islam and President Hosni Mubarak in eight of his blog articles written since 2004. He was also the first blogger to stand trial in Egypt for Internet wr...

20 November 2007
08:42 GMT

Tutankhamon's Face Exposed to the Public

Those fascinated by the ancient Egypt have been waiting for this moment for 85 years, since the discovery of the famous mummy of the 19-year-old "Boy Pharaoh" by Howard Carter: as from yesterday the public can see the 3,000-year-old face of Tutankhamon in his tomb in the famous Valley of the Kings.The mummy has a shr...

5 November 2007
02:50 GMT

How Did Tut Die? The Hunter King

The puzzle around the death of the Pharaoh Tutankhamun becomes more and more interesting. An upcoming TV documentary says the boy king could have died because of a fall from his chariot during a hunt. 2005 CT scans revealed a severe fracture in his left thighbone and theories about murder were replaced by the hypothe...

24 October 2007
03:01 GMT

The Curse of the Pharaoh

Ignorant tourists make many dumb acquisitions and they should prevent that. Buying exotic seashells means more reefs destroyed, an ivory piece another dead elephant, a monkey and a parrot a step towards the species' extinction and tiger bones or rhino horns translate to less tigers or rhinos. But if consciousnes...

10 September 2007
06:00 GMT

World's Oldest Human Functional Prosthesis, Found on an Egyptian Mummy

We know that queen Hatshepsut wore false beard. But the ancient Egyptian technology went much further. An artificial big toe discovered on the foot of an Egyptian mummy could be the world's oldest functioning prosthetic body part. Volunteers missing their right big toe will test replicas of the prosthesis to see...

28 July 2007
03:43 GMT

Nile, the River That Revives the Desert

It is best known as the longest river on the planet. Nile is consensually considered so as it has 6,695 km in length, even if some say that Amazon is longer (6,800 km). The problem is that nobody could tell where Amazon ends, due to its huge mouth. Anyway, while Amazon is the mightiest river on the planet (with a deb...

25 July 2007
11:27 GMT

Did Alexander Really Found Alexandria?

In his conquest of the world, Alexander the Great founded the legendary city of Alexandria when he reached Egypt. But new traces found underwater reveal a city existing on the same place at least seven centuries before the arrival of Alexander, which was even mentioned in Homer's Odyssey (describing the adventur...

25 July 2007
02:52 GMT

The Egyptian Civilization, 10,000 Years Older than Thought

While early Europeans were decorating cave walls with paintings of bisons, aurochs and lions, 15,000 years ago the ancient Egyptians made similar rock face drawings and etchings. "It is not at all an exaggeration to call it 'Lascaux on the Nile,'" said expedition leader Dirk Huyge, curator of the Egyptian C...

12 July 2007
02:49 GMT

Mummy Analysis Shows Ancient Egyptian Queen Was Fat, Balding and Bearded

Last week, perhaps the most significant finding from the ancient Egypt was announced, ever since the discovery of the tomb of Tutankhamun by the English archaeologist Howard Carter in 1922. In 1903, Carter had come across two sarcophagi in a tomb marked as KV60 in the Theban necropolis, the Valley of the Kings in Lux...

7 July 2007
04:52 GMT

The Mummy of the Female Pharaoh Hatshepsut Has Been Identified!

Perhaps the most fascinating woman of the ancient Egypt was not Cleopatra (which was not even Egyptian, but Greek), but the female Pharaoh Hatshepsut. Now, the rush for finding her mummy seems to have finally reached an end. This would be the most significant finding from the ancient Egypt since the discovery of the ...

27 June 2007
06:38 GMT

Luxor 2

This week's game is one that many of you already like. It has a very well known game-play... same old action-puzzle casual stuff.But nobody cares if the theme is expired, because everybody knows how addictive this game-play is. The rules of the game are easy to learn and in these kinds of cases, the graphics of ...

1 June 2007
15:24 GMT

Scanning Finds A Spear in the Head of an Egyptian Mummy

A mysterious mummy of a child was found in central Egypt, near the city of Abydos, in 1912. It was acquired by the Pittsburgh museum and it has been on display since 1989. The child must have lived sometime between 380 B.C. and 250 B.C., during the Greek Ptolemaic Dynasty (Cleopatra was the last of this dynasty), in...

5 May 2007
04:57 GMT

The Pharaoh of the Exodus Receives Back His Hair Stolen in France

This mighty pharaoh has been linked to the events counted in the Bible about the Jews' exodus from Egypt and was confronted by Moses. Ramses II (1270 to 1213 B.C.) was even more known as one of the greatest military leaders of the Ancient Egypt and builder of some of the largest Egyptian monuments. Now, locks of...

11 April 2007
11:07 GMT

Volcanic Foam from Atlantis Explosion Found on Egyptian Sinai

4700 years ago, in the place where Santorini archipelago is located today, occurred a devastating huge volcanic explosion. This eruption sank most of the land where now the Greek islands are located and killed over 35,000 people and the thriving Minoan civilization.All this is connected today to the myth of the Atlan...

3 April 2007
05:35 GMT

Pharaoh's Heart Unmasked

The Canopic jars have been on display in the Louvre Museum (Paris) for a century (more precisely from 1905) holding the embalmed innards of the great Egyptian pharaoh Ramses II the Great (1302-1213 BC). But a new chemical analysis made by a French team revealed that the four pots, scripted with hieroglyphs, are not w...

16 March 2007
08:40 GMT

What Was the Labyrinth?

When talking about the labyrinth, the most common concept is that of the famous palace from Knossos belonging to king Minos of Crete, built by the legendary Daedalus, who escaped from captivity together with his son Icarus by making themselves wax wings. Archaeologists named the palace "labyrinth" because the buildin...

7 March 2007
10:10 GMT


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